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Doubts about the academic battle being won
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [QB] Doxie, did you see my musings on the previous page? Well here it is, what do you have to say? [QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by kdolo: [qb] Lamin accuses White researchers of suffering from cognitive dissonance about Black African Egypt..... Then he goes on to engage in the same cognitive dissonance when discussing Black Europeans..... [/qb][/QUOTE]I wish lamin did suffer from cognitive dissonance, that would be an honest response to new information that is contrary to what he was taught or currently believes. But lamin, like most Albinos (referencing personal communications), through no other faculty than common sense, knows that their history is a lie: while intelligent Blacks simply dismiss it by referring to it as HIStory. The only ones who don't know that, are the poor downtrodden Negroes who are too busy trying to survive to think about the "fast one" the Albinos pulled off on them. (Free thought is a luxury of leisure time). It harkens back to Camus's definition of a revolutionary: i.e. men are not revolutionaries in the depths of their oppression, they only become revolutionaries when they see an end in sight - when they have reason to hope. (Paraphrasing). What I always wonder about, is what happens when the Africans and downtrodden Negroes figure it out. [/qb][/QUOTE][QUOTE]Originally posted by Mike111: [qb] ^What about the Crackers/Rednecks like you-know-who? Their behavior during the slavery times demonstrates their mindset. These non-slave-holding whites were known as "poor white trash" and "hillbillies". But these whites were in support of slavery because they wanted to eventually own a slave or two of their own, and thus achieve the "American dream" of moving up socially. To them, the riches of the Cotton Kingdom were a distant dream and they often sneered at the lordly pretensions of the cotton “snobocracy” all the while, hoping to emulate them . These red-necked farmers participated in the market economy scarcely at all, they were subsistence farmers who raised corn and hogs, not cotton, and often lived isolated lives (only occasionally meeting). Thus the antebellum South was really a place of delusion and delusionary dreams. The wealthy Planter thought of himself as a noble aristocrat: yet he was the most degenerate of men, one who made his living off of the deaths and misery of fellow human beings. His supporter and enabler, the common White Redneck: was in fact used and abused by the planter class. The planter had slaves to do every task, and supply every need, thus there was never any opportunity for the Redneck to learn a skill or get a job. But interestingly, the Redneck did not respond to this situation with anger at the Planter class. The reality of Black slaves being better educated and skilled than himself, only served to drive the Redneck further into racial delusion. The Redneck could see Black slaves working the fields and surviving, like his skin would never allow him to do: designing and building fine buildings and Bridges, like he lacked the skills to do: also doing the common skilled work such as Carpentry, Blacksmith and such. But instead of blaming the Planter Class for his lack of opportunity, the Redneck was taught to satisfied himself with the sure knowledge, that because he was White, he was better than the Black slave. [/qb][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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